4.3 Article

'It's a cultural thing': excuses used by health service providers on providing inclusive care

Journal

HEALTH SOCIOLOGY REVIEW
Volume 31, Issue 1, Pages 1-15

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/14461242.2020.1846581

Keywords

Microaggression; racism; communication; rural health; culture; inclusion

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [DP170101187]
  2. Australian Government Department of Health Rural Health Multidisciplinary Training Programme

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This study highlights the barriers to care that lead to the exclusion of First Nations Australians, immigrants, and refugees in Australian healthcare services. The findings reveal how healthcare professionals, as holders of organizational power, construct discourses about these marginalized groups through language, which perpetuates racial microaggressions. These discourses further contribute to the exclusion of individuals seeking healthcare and support.
Although health services in Australia have an aim to provide inclusive care for their patients/clients, this study highlights how barriers to care can lie at the centre of patient-provider interactions. Racial microaggression is a subtle form of racism that can occur in health settings, leading to further exclusion for First Nations Australians, immigrants and refugees. This paper is guided by Derrida's approach to deconstructionism by unpacking how language is used by health professionals - as holders of organisational power - and how they construct 'truths' or discourses about clients that historically have been marginalised by health services and system. Data comprise 21 interviews with staff from two rural health services. It identified three racial microaggressions were used to justify the challenges of providing care to people from First Nations, immigrant and refugee backgrounds: (1) Participants problematised culture(s) of service users; (2) participants implied cultural superiority in their conceptualisation of 'other' cultures; and (3) participants shared stories of inactions, discomfort and relegating of responsibility. The findings identified these discourses as forms of racial microaggression that can potentially lead to further exclusion of people seeking services and support.

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